Night of the Virgin
Directed by: Roberto San Sebastián
Written by: Guillermo Guerrero and Roberto San Sebastián
Starring: Javier Bódalo, Miriam Martín
Release Date: December 31, 2016 (Spain)
Night of the Virgin (2016) is one of the most disgusting, hilarious, and strangely profound horror comedies of the 21st century — a Spanish shocker that mixes David Cronenberg’s body horror with David Lynch’s surreal madness.
When a Gross-Out Becomes Art
Night of the Virgin turned my stomach — and I loved every minute of it.
That may sound like a backhanded compliment, but it’s anything but. This Spanish import from director Roberto San Sebastián is hysterically funny and deeply disturbing, packed with grotesque imagery, razor-sharp satire, and a surprising depth about male sexuality, fear, and shame.
The film follows Nico (Javier Bódalo), a sad, awkward young man spending New Year’s Eve alone and desperate for a hookup. He meets Medea (Miriam Martín), an older woman who invites him back to her filthy apartment for what seems like a pity encounter. But Medea harbors a terrifying secret — she’s part of a bizarre fertility cult, and Nico’s virginity is the key ingredient in a ritual that will scar your brain forever.
Cronenberg, Lynch, and Kafka Walk Into a Bar…
Explaining what happens in Night of the Virgin is nearly impossible without spoiling its shocks, but let’s just say that Medea’s apartment is a horror show only Eraserhead would find cozy. The film’s influences are clear: Cronenberg’s obsession with flesh, Lynch’s surreal dread, and Kafka’s nightmarish absurdity.
San Sebastián doesn’t shy away from filth, bodily fluids, and writhing organic horror. Yet there’s a strange elegance to the chaos. The camerawork, lighting, and pacing elevate the gross-out to something artful. It’s grotesque, but it’s never lazy. Every puddle of blood and every crawling roach feels like it’s there for a reason.
A Two-Character Descent Into Hell
The film mostly takes place in one location — Medea’s crumbling apartment — which becomes its own organism. The claustrophobic set traps Nico and the audience alike in an increasingly unhinged night of terror and black comedy.
Early on, you think you’re watching a story about a naive man being lured into a deadly ritual — but Night of the Virgin constantly twists expectations. What begins as a dark sexual farce becomes a full-blown nightmare that keeps topping itself with new levels of depravity and invention.
The Grotesque, the Funny, and the Fear of Sex
The brilliance of Night of the Virgin lies in its tone. It’s genuinely hilarious — not despite the horror, but because of it. The film mines awkward male insecurity for huge, uncomfortable laughs. Nico’s immaturity and sexual anxiety collide with Medea’s desperate, decaying seduction in ways that are both deeply funny and horrifying.
The movie plays like a fever dream of male fear — fear of women, of sex, of aging, of inadequacy. The result is an explosion of bodily fluids and existential dread.
The Art of the Gross-Out
Be warned: this movie is really gross.
But it’s not cheap gross. It’s inspired gross. San Sebastián turns viscera into visual poetry. The blood, the slime, the stench — all of it feels oddly deliberate, a metaphor for the anxieties at the film’s core.
The pregnancy sequence in particular — a scene that rivals Cronenberg’s The Fly for sheer body horror brilliance — is almost unbearable to watch, yet impossible to look away from. It’s shocking, yes, but also weirdly moving in its depiction of pain, birth, and transformation.
Final Thoughts
Night of the Virgin is a film for those who think they’ve seen it all — and want to be proven wrong. It’s stomach-churning, shocking, and absolutely hilarious in its willingness to push every possible boundary.
Director Roberto San Sebastián isn’t just trying to disgust you — he’s daring you to see the artistry in disgust. The result is a film that’s as daring as it is deranged, as funny as it is revolting.
Not for the squeamish, but essential viewing for anyone who believes horror should challenge, confront, and redefine what cinema can do.
Verdict
4.5 out of 5 — A disgusting masterpiece of dark comedy and body horror.